Skip to main content

Accuracy from Sandvik’s WX6500 screening media

NCC Industry in Södra Sandby, Sweden has been using Sandvik’s latest screening media technology, the WX6500, for over a year The company reports that the first fine screening test panels are still in place and performing reliably. NCC Industry's Stone Materials division said that it has long chosen rubber screening media over wire mesh. The choice is crucial in Södra Sandby, where abrasive quartzite produces excessive wear on metal components. Yet despite its preference, the company said that it had stru
April 13, 2018 Read time: 4 mins
Sunny days ahead for Sandvik’s WX6500 screening media
NCC Industry in Södra Sandby, Sweden has been using Sandvik’s latest screening media technology, the WX6500, for over a year


The company reports that the first fine screening test panels are still in place and performing reliably. NCC Industry's Stone Materials division said that it has long chosen rubber screening media over wire mesh. The choice is crucial in Södra Sandby, where abrasive quartzite produces excessive wear on metal components. Yet despite its preference, the company said that it had struggled to find a long-term rubber solution for fine screening.

A turning point came when 325 Sandvik approached 5211 NCC about a full-scale test of the WX6500. Specifically designed for fine screening in the 2–32 mm range, the new rubber media was presented as a light, thin and yet highly durable alternative. This raised some eyebrows at NCC Industry and its Stone Materials division. “When I first saw the Sandvik WX6500, I really wondered about the thinness of it,” acknowledged NCC Industry supervisor Magnus Klinte. “With the aggressive raw material we have, I thought it would wear out directly.”

NCC Industry agreed to use the WX6500 on a Mogårdshammar FH C 2172/3 screen, which would receive a feed size of up to 32mm from a Svedala H6800 crusher. Five panels with 26mm holes were delivered as rolls and installed on the upper deck in summer 2016.

“The outer dimensions of this screen are big, but it’s a very tight fit inside,” said Klinte who is also a former service technician. “The WX6500 was thin and very easy to roll out, which makes a difference when there’s little space between the decks.”

Klinte also noted that the panels could be installed with a much higher tension than other rubber media, producing a drumskin-like fit that benefits the screening result. “The material is thin, but you can get a lot rougher with it,” he explained. “Media in standard materials with the same thickness can’t be installed with the same amount of tension.”

A year later


Klinte said that the real revelation, however, came the first time the test installation was inspected. “There was so little wear that you could still see the structural markings from the manufacturing process.” Around 285,000toness have been fed to the WX6500 panels since the start of the test. This far exceeds the 30,000tonnes that would have been achievable with wire mesh and “it’s still going strong”.

Combined with the ease of installation, this durability means further ways to extend the media life. When the panels at the feed end of the deck eventually begin to wear, they can be removed and reinstalled at the far end, where they take less of a beating.

“If you remove a wire mesh panel, you won’t be able to reuse it. It’s sharp, nasty and complicated to get off in one piece. Even if you could, it would be a struggle to get it tight again,” noted Klinte. “WX6500 is light, flexible and perfect to reuse on the screen.

NCC Industry said that Sandvik WX6500 provides highly accurate sizing, ensuring a finished product with the desired maximum dimension of 32mm. “The material is so thin that it really doesn’t plug, so we have no problems with the blinding and pegging that you get with thicker media,” Klinte says.

The problem-free sizing makes the media popular with operators, who also experience 50% less noise compared to wire mesh. “Our plant is indoors to contain the silica dust, so any improvement in noise levels makes a big difference,” he said.

Accuracy is Key
Sandvik’s newest screening media, the WX6500, sorts like steel but lasts like rubber, according to the manufacturer.
The WX6500 screening media has the same accuracy as wire mesh at 2–32mm separations. This means that this marks the first time that customers can choose a rubber media for fine screening.
It offers everything wire mesh media can, but with 10 times the product life and easy delivery as a lightweight roll, said Sandvik. The length and width of the screen deck are all that is needed for a perfect fit.
It takes half the time of mesh media to install and does the same job but with less blinding, less pegging, fewer inspections and a fraction of the media changes. With fewer changes there is far less screen downtime.
The thinness and flexibility of the material prevents the blinding and pegging associated with wire mesh meaning that the desired product comes out first time. Because Sandvik WX6500 blinds and pegs less often, there are fewer media inspections and less time spent on troubleshooting and replacements.

Screening duty: Intermediate and final
Max feed size: 20-70mm
Separation: 2-32mm
Application: Dry
Dewatering: No
Deck design: Cambered
Panel type: Tensioned
Material: Rubber
Aperture: Punched
Fastening: Cross- or length-tensioned

For more information on companies in this article

Related Content

  • Deep and wide with Wirtgen’s W 100 CFi compact milling machine
    May 14, 2018
    The spread of fibre-optic cables, especially for broadband internet access, is advancing rapidly across the world. The Upper Austrian district of Schärding, not far from the German border, is no exception. Engelhartszell is the second community to benefit from this technology. And the contractor, Hemmelmair Frästechnik from Linz, is also making use of cutting-edge technology - in this case made from steel and carbide. A Wirtgen W 100 CFi compact milling machine with deep milling unit is being used for tren
  • A European Deere?
    July 4, 2018
    Iconic US manufacturer John Deere is back in Europe, thanks to its purchase of Wirtgen. David Arminas looks at what’s in store The gods were smiling on the Wirtgen Group for the company’s Road Technology Days 2018 event. This year it was held in summer-like weather at the recently expanded Voegele plant near Mannheim in Germany. Within days in northern Europe the season dramatically changed from dreary chilly late winter to glorious high temperatures, just in time to bathe the amassed demonstration equi
  • Micro surfacing the Brooklyn Bridge with Bergkamps’ M210 paver
    May 16, 2018
    A major job for micro surfacing took place on the Brooklyn Bridge near New York. It was the third time in Ken Messina’s career that he would provide micro surfacing for the iconic Brooklyn Bridge, built in 1883. Messina, as president of New Jersey-based Asphalt Paving Systems (APS), knew only too well the challenges that lay ahead. And there were many. There would be only a brief window of opportunity for paving, with lane closures starting at 10pm and ending at 5am. The cool, humid atmosphere would a
  • New crushing and screening developments abounded at Hillhead
    October 3, 2014
    A wide array of crushing, screening and materials handling technologies have been introduced in recent months - Mike Woof writes The manufacturers of crushing and screening products have been developing an array of new systems to optimise production. The recent Hillhead show in the UK was the launch point for a number of these new products, although firms from all over the world have also been developing new designs. Productivity and wear life are two performance factors seeing major benefits from innovatio